Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont
DecidedNovember 22, 2019
Docket19-10285
StatusUnknown

This text of Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc. (Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc., (Vt. 2019).

Opinion

Formatted for Electronic Distribution = Not for Publication UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF VERMONT

Filed & Entered On Docket 11/22/2019

In re: Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc., Case # 19-10285 Debtor-in-Possession. Chapter 11

Appearances: D. Sam Anderson, Esq. Stephen D. Ellis, Esq. Adam R. Prescott, Esq. Sarah E, Cornwell, Esq. Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson, P.A. Paul Frank & Collins P.C. Portland, ME Burlington, VT For the Debtor For Timothy R. Ford James Anderson, Esq. Lisa M. Penpraze, Esq. Elizabeth A. Glynn, Esq. Amy J. Ginsberg, Esq. Ryan Smith & Carbine, Ltd. Office of the United States Trustee Rutland, VT Albany, NY For Berkshire Bank For the United States Trustee MEMORANDUM OF DECISION SUSTAINING IN PART AND OVERRULING IN PART U.S. TRUSTEE’S OBJECTION, GRANTING APPLICATION TO EMPLOY BERRY DUNN MCNEIL & PARKER, LLC NUNC PRO TUNC TO AUGUST 20, 2019, AND DIRECTING DEBTOR’S ATTORNEYS TO PAY ALLOWED GAP PERIOD COMPENSATION TO PROFESSIONAL The Debtor seeks to employ a financial advisor, to be paid by the bankruptcy estate, to assist it in its chapter 11 reorganization. The Debtor has worked with this professional for approximately 20 years, including in anticipation of the bankruptcy filing and throughout this bankruptcy case. While the Debtor has persuasively argued how vital this professional’s assistance could be to its reorganization, the U.S. trustee has raised questions about: (i) whether the professional is disinterested and thus eligible for appointment; (ii) whether the Debtor made all necessary disclosures in its application; and (iii) whether the professional may be paid retroactively to the petition date, when the Debtor did not file the application until 100 days post-petition.

JURISDICTION The Court has jurisdiction over this contested matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334, and the Amended Order of Reference entered on June 22, 2012. The Court declares the Debtor’s Application to be a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A), over which this Court has constitutional authority to enter a final judgment. PROCEDURAL HISTORY On October 4, 2019, Debtor Springfield Medical Care Systems, Inc. (“SMCS” or the “Debtor”) filed an application to employ Berry Dunn McNeil & Parker, LLC (“BerryDunn” or the “Applicant”) to provide certain auditing, accounting, tax, and financial modeling services to the Debtor in this chapter 11 case, effective nunc pro tunc to the petition date, June 26, 2019 (doc. # 191, the “Application”). Creditor Berkshire Bank has joined that Application (doc. # 240). Creditor Timothy Ford filed a limited objection (doc. # 198) solely for the purpose of contesting certain representations in the Application, which the Court does not discuss herein as that limited objection does not contest BerryDunn’s eligibility for appointment or address the effective date of BerryDunn’s appointment.1 The U.S. trustee (“UST”) filed an objection disputing both BerryDunn’s eligibility for appointment and the Debtor’s right to have this professional appointed as of the petition date, and asking the Court to deny the Application (doc. # 200, the “UST Objection”). SMCS filed a timely response to the UST Objection (doc. # 217, the “Debtor Response”) and, at the Court’s direction, SMCS also filed a supplement setting forth the cost of the services the Debtor’s attorneys rendered in connection with the Application and the cost of the services BerryDunn rendered between the petition date and the date the Application was filed (doc. # 245, the “Debtor Supplement”). Accordingly, this contested matter is now fully submitted. LEGAL ISSUES PRESENTED The fundamental legal issue presented in this case is whether BerryDunn is eligible to be appointed to render professional services to the Debtor and this bankruptcy estate. If so, then the next question is whether the Debtor has satisfied the legal requirements for BerryDunn’s appointment to be effective as of the petition date, even though the Debtor did not file an application for appointment until more than three months after the petition was filed.

1 This limited objection sought to clarify certain factual assertions in the Application and the attached affidavit regarding “management,” “executive management,” and the events precipitating the bankruptcy filing (see doc. # 198). Counsel for Mr. Ford confirmed at a hearing held on October 18, 2019, that the objection was only filed to flag the disputed language as whether BerryDunn may be compensated by the estate for services it rendered between the petition date and the date of appointment, and (c) if BerryDunn may not be compensated by the estate for such services, then who should bear those costs. DISCUSSION A. The UST Objection The UST Objection asks the Court to deny approval of the Application, based on three arguments: (i) BerryDunn is not disinterested, (ii) the Debtor failed to disclose all of BerryDunn’s salient connections to parties involved in this case, and (iii) employment nunc pro tunc is not permitted under Cushman & Wakefield v. Keren P’ship (In re Keren P’ship), 189 F.3d 86 (2d Cir. 1999) because the Debtor did not timely file the Application (doc # 200, p.1). The Court will address each of these arguments, as well as the Debtor’s responses, in the context of the controlling Second Circuit caselaw, the governing statute and rules, this Court’s prior rulings on this topic, and equitable principles pertinent to the issues presented. (i) Is BerryDunn Disinterested? The UST’s assertion that BerryDunn is not “disinterested” rests primarily on his view that the Debtor may have a preference claim against BerryDunn (doc. # 200, pp. 4–5).2 In support of his position, the UST cites two Third Circuit decisions, Staiano v. Pillowtex, Inc. (In re Pillowtex, Inc.), 304 F.3d 246, 255 (3rd Cir. 2002) and United States Trustee v. First Jersey Sec., Inc. (In re First Jersey Sec., Inc.), 180 F.3d 504, 509 (3rd Cir. 1999), and states, “it appears that BerryDunn received approximately $50,000 on behalf of antecedent debts” (doc. # 200, p. 5).3 In its Response, the Debtor points out that since BerryDunn has waived its pre-petition claim, it holds no interest materially adverse to the interest of the estate or any class of creditors, as is required by the definition of a “disinterested person” under 11 U.S.C. § 101(14)4 (doc. # 217, pp. 1–2). The Debtor also denies the UST’s allegation that BerryDunn is the recipient of payments in excess of $48,500 that are vulnerable to avoidance under § 547, instead estimating BerryDunn’s potential exposure is likely to be no more than approximately $9,500 (doc. # 217, p. 4). Moreover, the Debtor argues, even this de minimis potential exposure is highly remote since the Debtor is under no obligation to pursue disgorgement of those payments, even if the payments meet the statutory definition of preferential transfers, and the Debtor would be unlikely to do so because the cost of litigation would undoubtedly exceed any recovery

2 The UST also points out that BerryDunn holds a pre-petition claim against the Debtor, but does not rely on that as a basis for his objection since BerryDunn has agreed to waive that claim.

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